Methods and systems for identifying nucleotide-guided nuclease off-target sites

a nuclease and nucleotide technology, applied in the field of bioinformatics methods and systems for identifying nucleotide-directed nuclease on target and putative off-target sites, can solve the problems that none of these bioinformatics search tools has considered off-target sites, nor provide application-specific primers, etc., to facilitate experimental confirmation of off-target activity, improve search speed, and increase run time

Active Publication Date: 2022-04-26
GEORGIA TECH RES CORP
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

[0024]The genomic sequence(s) can be DNA sequence converted into FASTA or similarly formatted files, then transformed into index entries that have all possible 25 bases-long tags in the DNA sequence. In other embodiments, other tagging schemes can be used including longer and shorter tags. The index entries can be sorted and the results stored as a binary main index file. The main index file can be divided into parts, each representing entries having about 12 nucleotides of the first nucleotides identical. In other embodiments, other lengths of index files may be used. A secondary index file can include the position in the main index file where each part starts added to the end of the index file. Searching genome sequence organized and indexed in such a way can improve the speed of the search, while allowing exhaustive searching. Preferred embodiments utilize index files, though other embodiments cou...

Problems solved by technology

However, none of these bioinformatics search tools has considered the off-target sites due to inse...

Method used

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  • Methods and systems for identifying nucleotide-guided nuclease off-target sites
  • Methods and systems for identifying nucleotide-guided nuclease off-target sites
  • Methods and systems for identifying nucleotide-guided nuclease off-target sites

Examples

Experimental program
Comparison scheme
Effect test

example 1

ide Strands can Exhibit Off-Target Activity at Similar Levels as On-Target Activity, Even with Mismatches within First 12 Nucleotides

Materials and Methods

[0326]CRISPR Design and Testing

[0327]There were no CRISPR target sites in the human HBB gene sequence with their proximal 12 bases unique in the human genome (Cong, et al., Science, 339:819-823 (2013)); therefore, CRISPR / Cas9 guide strands targeting HBB were chosen by comparing the similar regions in the human hemoglobin δ (HBD) gene. Eight 20-base guide strands were designed to target sites near the sickle mutation in the HBB gene (FIG. 1A), each adjacent to a PAM sequence that contains the canonical trinucleotide NGG. Five guide strands were also designed to target two segments in the human CCR5 gene (FIG. 2A), and tested the corresponding CRISPR / Cas9 systems to determine their on-target cleavage and potential off-target activity at the human C—C chemokine receptor type 2 (CCR2) gene. Herein the name of the guide strand (such as ...

example 2

rgeted Loci Showed a Wide Variety of Insertions, Deletions and Point Mutations

Materials and Methods

[0343]Chromosomal Deletion Analysis

[0344]To assay for gross chromosomal deletions, genomic DNA from cells transfected with R-03 was amplified using the HBD forward primer and the reverse primer downstream of the HBB site. Genomic DNA from cells transfected with R-25 or R-30 were similarly amplified using the CCR2 forward and the CCR5 reverse primers. Agarose gels were used to confirm that the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) product sizes were consistent with chromosomal deletions between these sites. The R-03, R-25 and R-30 PCR products were cloned and the individual colonies Sanger sequenced and aligned.

[0345]Quantitative PCR

[0346]Quantitative PCR determination of the percentage of HBD-HBB chromosomal deletions. HEK-293 cells were transfected in triplicate with CRISPR plasmids containing guide strands R-02 or R-03, or mock transfected cells. Genomic DNA was harvested using QuickExtrac...

example 3

iants Containing Single-Base DNA Bulges Induce Cas9 Cleavage

Materials and Methods

[0356]CRISPR / Cas9 Plasmid Assembly

[0357]DNA oligonucleotides containing a G followed by a 19-nt guide sequence (Table 3) were kinased, annealed to create sticky ends and ligated into the pX330 plasmid that contains the +85 chimeric RNA under the U6 promoter and a Cas9 expression cassette under the CBh promoter (available at Addgene) (Hsu, et al., Nat Biotechnol, 31 (2013)).

[0358]

TABLE 4Protospacer target sites for the sgRNAsused in Examples 3-8 (Table 4 disclosesSEQ ID NOS 35-61, respectively, in orderof appearance)StorageGeneIndexProtospacer Target (5′ to 3′) PAMHBBR-01GTGAACGTGGATGAAGTTGG TGGHBBR-03GACGTTCACCTTGCCCCACA GGGHBBR-04GCACGTTCACCTTGCCCCAC AGGHBBR-05GGTCTGCCGTTACTGCCCTG TGGHBBR-06GGTTACTGCCCTGTGGGGCA AGGHBBR-07GAGGTGAACGTGGATGAAGT TGGHBBR-08GCTGTGGGGCAAGGTGAACG TGGEGFPR-19GGTGGTGCAGATGAACTTCA GGGEGFPR-20GACCAGGATGGGCACCACCC CGGCCR5R-25GTGTTCATCTTTGGTTTTGT GGGCCR5R-26GCTGCCGCCCAGTGGGACTT TGGC...

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Abstract

Methods and systems for searching genomes for potential nucleotide-guided nuclease off-target sites are provided. Also provided are methods of searching genomes for potential off-target deadCas9 binding sites. In some embodiments, the methods include ranking the potential off-target sites based on the number and location of mismatches, insertions, and/or deletions in the DNA, RNA, or DNA/RNA guide sequence relative to the genomic DNA sequence at a putative target site in the genome, allowing the selection of better target sites and/or experimental confirmation of off-target sites.

Description

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS[0001]This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16 / 410,395 filed May 13, 2019, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15 / 114,799, filed Jul. 26, 2016, which was a 371 application of International Application No. PCT / US2015 / 013134 filed Jul. 27, 2015, which claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Ser. No. 61 / 932,003 filed Jan. 27, 2014 and which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH[0002]This invention was made with government support under Grant PN2EY018244 awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The government has certain rights in the invention.SEQUENCE LISTING[0003]The Sequence Listing submitted on Oct. 8, 2019, as a text file named “GTRC_6478_SL_txt.txt” created on May 13, 2019, and having a size of 271,348 bytes is hereby incorporated by reference pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 1.52(e)(5).FIELD OF THE INVENTION[00...

Claims

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Application Information

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IPC IPC(8): G16B30/00G06F16/22G06F16/2458G06N7/00
CPCG16B30/00G06F16/2228G06F16/2468G06N7/005G16B25/20G16B20/30G06F16/2458G06F16/26G06N7/01
Inventor CRADICK, THOMAS JAMESBAO, GANGQIU, PENG
Owner GEORGIA TECH RES CORP
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